Abstract

Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) is a hypoxia-induced cell surface enzyme expressed in solid tumors, and functionally involved in acidification of extracellular pH and destabilization of intercellular contacts. Since both extracellular acidosis and reduced cell adhesion facilitate invasion and metastasis, we investigated the role of CA IX in cell migration, which promotes the metastatic cascade. As demonstrated here, ectopically expressed CA IX increases scattering, wound healing and transwell migration of MDCK cells, while an inactive CA IX variant lacking the catalytic domain (ΔCA) fails to do so. Correspondingly, hypoxic HeLa cells exhibit diminished migration upon inactivation of the endogenous CA IX either by forced expression of the dominant-negative ΔCA variant or by treatment with CA inhibitor, implying that the catalytic activity is indispensable for the CA IX function. Interestingly, CA IX improves cell migration both in the absence and presence of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), an established inducer of epithelial-mesenchymal transition. On the other hand, HGF up-regulates CA IX transcription and triggers CA IX protein accumulation at the leading edge of lamellipodia. In these membrane regions CA IX co-localizes with sodium bicarbonate co-transporter (NBCe1) and anion exchanger 2 (AE2) that are both components of the migration apparatus and form bicarbonate transport metabolon with CA IX. Moreover, CA IX physically interacts with AE2 and NBCe1 in situ, as shown here for the first time. Thus, our findings suggest that CA IX actively contributes to cell migration via its ability to facilitate ion transport and pH control at protruding fronts of moving cells.

Highlights

  • Hypoxia-induced Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) contributes to pH control in tumor cells, and control of pH is important for cell migration

  • catalytic domain (CA) IX Increases Migration of MDCK Cells in an hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)-independent Manner—To evaluate the role of CA IX in cell migration, we utilized stably transfected MDCK-CA IX cells, which display basolateral localization of CA IX, increased CA IX-mediated extracellular acidification in response to hypoxia, and reduced cell-cell adhesion when compared with mock-transfected CA IX-negative MDCK cells [18, 2]

  • This was clearly due to CA IX, as the expression levels of the HGF receptor c-Met were equal in CA IX-expressing cells and in negative controls

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Summary

Background

Hypoxia-induced CA IX contributes to pH control in tumor cells, and control of pH is important for cell migration. Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) is a hypoxia-induced cell surface enzyme expressed in solid tumors, and functionally involved in acidification of extracellular pH and destabilization of intercellular contacts Since both extracellular acidosis and reduced cell adhesion facilitate invasion and metastasis, we investigated the role of CA IX in cell migration, which promotes the metastatic cascade. Reduced cell-to-cell adhesion is the first prerequisite for epithelial cell migration that is usually connected to altered expression, topographic localization and/or functional inactivation of cadherins and other junctional proteins [13] This is facilitated by receptor-mediated signaling induced in response to extracellular growth factors, such as the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), which binds to the c-Met receptor tyrosine kinase and thereby activates intracellular effector molecules [14]. Our findings support the view that CA IX actively contributes to cell migration and that the catalytic domain is required for its proper function

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